The Concept and History of Capitalism Philosophy of Economics - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
The Concept and History of Capitalism Philosophy of Economics - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
The Concept and History of Capitalism Philosophy of Economics University of Virginia Matthias Brinkmann Contents 1. The Concept of Capitalism 2. Types of Capitalism 3. What is capitalism? The Concept of Capitalism 2 03/09/2019 Is
Contents
1. The Concept of Capitalism 2. Types of Capitalism 3. What is capitalism?
03/09/2019
2 The Concept of Capitalism
Is “capitalism” a useful term?
[In an article about decisions made by the Texas Board of Education:] In economics, the revisions add Milton Friedman and Friedrich von Hayek, two champions of free-market economic theory, among the usual list of economists to be studied, like Adam Smith, Karl Marx and John Maynard Keynes. They also replaced the word “capitalism” throughout their texts with the “free-enterprise system.” “Let’s face it, capitalism does have a negative connotation,” said one conservative member, Terri Leo. “You know, ‘capitalist pig!’ ”
Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/13/education/13texas.html?hp
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3 The Concept of Capitalism
Is “capitalism” a useful term?
[…] we do not believe the term capitalism to be a useful one for the purposes of comparative economic or political analysis. By focusing on the ownership and accumulation of capital, this term distracts from the characteristics of societies which are more important in determining their economic development and the extent of inequality. For example, both Uzbekistan and modern Switzerland have private ownership of capital, but these societies have little in common in terms of prosperity and inequality because the nature of their economic and political institutions differs so sharply. In fact, Uzbekistan’s capitalist economy has more in common with avowedly noncapitalist North Korea than Switzerland […].
Acemoglu, Daron, and James A. Robinson. “The Rise and Decline of General Laws of Capitalism.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 29, no. 1 (2015): 3–28, at 4. 03/09/2019
4 The Concept of Capitalism
Problems with the Concept of Capitalism
- Problem 1: Capitalism is a politicised concept—it is not neutral
- Problem 2: Capitalism is not a useful concept—it does not capture what is
relevantly similar
- Problem 3: Capitalism’s nature has changed over time—is there anything that
unifies the different types of capitalism we see across time and countries?
- Problem 4: The concept of capitalism is used ambiguously by different people
- What might other problems be with the concept of capitalism?
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5 The Concept of Capitalism
Contents
1. The Concept of Capitalism 2. Types of Capitalism 3. What is capitalism?
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6 The Concept of Capitalism
Fulcher: Stages of Capitalism
- Merchant Capitalism (17th/18th c.)
use of capital, global trade, merchants heavily invest capital, proto-factory production
but: no free markets, limited role of banks and state, limited overall scale
- Industrial Capitalism (18th/19th c.)
Industrialisation, urbanisation, rise of wage labour, free trade
early 19th c.: managed capitalism (heavy state-involvement)
- Financial Capitalism (20th/21th c.)
(Extreme) globalisation, limited state involvement, increasing commodification
Other categorisations are possible. (Also: think across countries, not just across time.)
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Fulcher’s Five Features of Capitalism
- 1. The investment of money to make more money as a mode of financing
production
- 2. Exploitation of wage labour
- 3. Mediation of production and consumption by markets; general reliance on
markets
- 4. Competition, but also tendency towards market capture
- 5. Market fluctuation and financial speculation
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Contents
1. The Concept of Capitalism 2. Types of Capitalism 3. What is capitalism?
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9 The Concept of Capitalism
Defining Capitalism
We must distinguish between
- Core elements of capitalism—something could not be capitalism without
having this feature
- Paradigm features of capitalism—most forms of capitalism will have most of
these features, but they might deviate in some
- Subtypes of capitalism—features which are relevant to a recognizable subtype
- f capitalism, but play no role in other subtypes
- Contingent features of capitalism—while capitalism is often accompanied by
these features, this is merely an accident
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An Analogy: Democracy
Defining democracy:
- Core elements of democracy: regular, free elections of legislature
- Paradigm features of democracy: freedom of speech and association;
separation of powers; constitutional limits on power (etc.); widespread franchise
- Subtypes of democracy: representative democracy; direct democracy (etc.)
- Contingent features of democracy: a tolerant society; civil liberties; a
competitive party system; political pluralism
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Exercise
- 1. What might potential elements in a definition of capitalism be?
- 2. How can we sort these elements into the four categories?
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Summary
Capitalism is not an immediately clear concept—we can even doubt whether it is neutral or useful There have been different types of capitalism—in particular, mercantile, industrial, managed, and financial capitalism We must distinguish between core elements, paradigm features, subtypes, and contingent features of capitalism (At least) paradigm features: private
- wnership, centrality of markets, profit
motive, wage labour system
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Thank you!
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What is capitalism?
I propose a working definition of capitalism that emphasizes decentralization, commodification, and accumulation as basic characteristics. First, it is essential that individual and collective actors have rights, usually property rights, that enable them to make economic decisions in a relatively autonomous and decentralized way. Second, markets serve as the main mechanisms of allocation and coordination; commodification permeates capitalism in many ways, including labor. Third, capital is central, which means utilizing resources for present investment in expectation of future higher gains, accepting credit in addition to savings and earnings as sources of investment funds, dealing with uncertainty and risk, and maintaining profit and accumulation as goals. (Kocka 2016, 21)
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What is capitalism?
There are two key features that make an economy capitalist.
- 1. Most production of goods and services is undertaken by privately owned
companies, which produce and sell their output in hopes of making a profit. This is called PRODUCTION FOR PROFIT.
- 2. Most work in the economy is performed by people who do not own their
company or their output, but are hired by someone else to work in return for a money wage or salary. This is called WAGE LABOUR. (Stanford/Biddle 2008, 34)
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What is capitalism?
[C]apitalism, when fully developed, is best understood as a system of generalized commodity production driven by the pursuit of profit and based on free wage labor […]. (Coates 2015, 4)
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